RhymeForge Β· Word page

Words that rhyme with Find

Most songwriters treat find as a velocity-word, but the phonology underneath matters: one-syllable, vowel on the bright /aΙͺ/, ending that lands on the nasal-into-stop combo. It's restless β€” the line behind it tends to move. What the engine returns: perfect rhymes are common for this one, the family column adds a handful of singable slants, and the vowel-only slant pool is deep enough to write a whole album from. Lyric-wise, the word reads as a forward-leaning verb. Build the chorus from the strict list; the slants are saved for the bridge.

Open find in RhymeForge β†’

Perfect rhymes (25 shown)

Exact match from the stressed vowel onward, with voice-pair near-perfects folded in.

Family rhymes (5 shown)

Same vowel, with a single consonant swapped for one from the same articulatory family. Slant rhymes that pass the ear test.

Additive & subtractive (25 shown)

Same core sound, with an extra consonant added (or one dropped) at the end.

Assonance (25 shown)

Matching vowel sound, consonants ignored. The biggest pool by far, and the workhorse of slant rhyming.

Ending rhymes (0 shown)

A shared unstressed final syllable β€” the window/shadow slant. Weaker than a perfect rhyme, completely idiomatic in song.

No ending rhymes for find β€” its final syllable carries the stress, so the columns above do the work.

Consonance (25 shown)

Matching consonant sound, vowels ignored. Best for texture and tension rather than punch.

How songwriters use these rhymes

Perfect rhymes
All the words I learned for find came back as bind.
Family rhymes
Between find and climbed the family rhyme does its quiet work.
Additive & subtractive
It started as find, ended as kinds, same vowel either way.
Assonance
Find at the line's beginning, child at its end, same vowel humming through both.
Ending rhymes

No ending rhymes for find β€” its final syllable carries the stress, so the columns above do the work.

Consonance
Listen for the consonant under find and you'll hear it again under band.

Why find rhymes the way it does

Pull find apart phonetically and you get a one-syllable word with the open /aΙͺ/ diphthong (/aΙͺnd/) as the rhyme-bearing vowel; the close closes on the nasal-stop pairing. In our 54,000-word dictionary the perfect-rhyme pool returns 55 matches, family rhymes 5, additive and subtractive together 577, assonance 3,905, and consonance 546. That's a generous landscape on both axes. A song can stay in strict rhymes across a verse without repeating itself, then drop into family rhymes for the bridge. In the room with a guitar: write toward the strict rhyme first, then go back through and replace the obvious ones with the assonance matches that earned their place. Find is a word that benefits from the second pass.

More songwriting tools

Stuck on the chord side of the song? The chord progression builder on the Undercover Zest home page maps every common progression in every key, with borrowed chords and substitutions called out. Need a fresh angle on a stuck lyric? CollisionLab generates unexpected word pairings to break a writer's block. All free, no signup.

About RhymeForge

RhymeForge is the free rhyme finder built into Undercover Zest. It searches over 54,000 words across five rhyme types: perfect, family, additive, assonance, and consonance. It is built for songwriters, not crossword solvers, and the slant-rhyme classifications are tuned accordingly.

This page is a static snapshot of the rhymes for find. For interactive search, voice-pair highlighting, syllable counting and quality sorting, open find in RhymeForge above.